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Journal Article

Assessing the impact of dip angle on carbon storage in saline reservoirs to aid site selection

Abstract

Reservoir dip angle and permeability significantly impact CO2 plume migration and the amount of secondary phase trapping in storage formations. There is a fundamental trade-off between up-dip plume migration and secondary trapping that can be advantageous, or disadvantageous, for selecting an optimal CO2 storage site. For example, low permeability reservoirs have limited plume migration up-dip, consequently, residual and solubility trapping are also limited. On the contrary, for highly permeable reservoirs, up-dip migration can be fast and extensive, leading to accelerated residual and solubility trapping. By performing a systematic simulation study of plume migration and secondary trapping in reservoirs with a range of permeabilities and dip angles, we found that having a dip angle of at least 1◦ and permeability of at least 500mD results in up to 88% of the plume being immobilized 100 years post-injection. In reservoirs with a permeability of at least 500mD, we can optimize the amount of immobilized CO2 while limiting the amount of plume migration. As reservoir dip angles increase up to 2◦ and permeability increases, CO2 plume migration increases progressively, and up to 8x more mass of CO2 can migrate up-dip versus down-dip. At the same time, CO2 solubility in brine and residual trapping work to decrease the plume volume and can immobilize 28% to 90% of the CO2 plume over 100 years post-injection. Five influential parameters were identified that strongly influence the plume volume during the post-injection period for these dipping reservoirs: CO2 saturation, residual gas saturation, CO2 solubility in brine, CO2 density, and formation permeability. We also investigated the impact of simulation grid resolution, the maximum non-wetting phase saturation, and the pore-size distribution parameter on predicted plume behavior. This work provides simple, reliable relationships between key site screening metrics, reservoir dip angle, and permeability to inform the site selection process and monitoring, measurement, and verification (MMV) design.

Assessing the impact of dip angle on carbon storage in saline reservoirs to aid site selection

Author(s)
Catherine Callas
Anthony R Kovscek
Sally M Benson
Journal Name
International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
Publication Date
August 22, 2023
DOI
10.1016/j.ijggc.2023.103966
Publisher
Elsevier